In the United States, the game topped the
RePlay chart for upright
arcade cabinets in December 1991, and remained at the top of the
RePlay upright arcade charts into early 1992 through April 1992. It also topped the overall US
Play Meter arcade chart in April 1992, briefly displacing
Street Fighter II as the top-earning arcade video game in the US for a month. In Japan,
Game Machine listed
Terminator 2: Judgment Day on their February 1, 1992 issue as being the second most successful upright arcade unit of the month.
GamePro commented that the graphics in the SNES version "closely match the arcade version." They also praised the digitized voices and fun gameplay, and concluded that the game is "probably the only good excuse you have for getting a
Super Scope", though they also commented that the SNES Mouse is the best control option for the game.
Terminator 2: Judgment Day was ranked as the 18th best arcade game of the 1990s by
Complex. Brad Cook of
AllGame gave the arcade version three and a half stars out of five, and noted the game's difficulty. Brett Alan Weiss of AllGame gave the SNES version three and a half stars and wrote, "The biggest drawback of T2: The Arcade Game is the controls. If you don't have a Super Scope (or at the very least a mouse), the game suffers quite a bit because you can't move the sight as fast or as precisely as you would like." Weiss called it "a faithfully recreated game," and wrote, "Though not quite as satisfying as the arcade version, it's about as good as you could expect from the 16-bit SNES." Steve Bradley of
Amiga Format gave the Amiga version a 73 percent rating and called it "a faithful conversion" of the arcade version, as well as, "A fast, furious and frantic, if rather limited, shoot-em-up with a barrowload of violence chucked in for good measure."
CU Amiga gave the Amiga version a 90 percent rating and called it, "A pixel perfect recreation of the fantastic arcade experience."
CU Amiga called its graphics "miles better than the Mega Drive conversion," and noted that it was easier than the arcade version because of its different speed levels. Stuart Campbell of
Amiga Power gave the Amiga version a 57 percent rating and felt that it was an improvement from an earlier
Terminator 2 video game by
Ocean Software. However, Campbell wrote, "The graphics are small and shoddy, the sound is largely horrible, the gameplay is repetitive and swiftly tedious, and you will more than likely finish it inside three or four goes. If you can bear the frustration of
having that many goes in the first place, that is. Tangibly inferior to the Mega Drive version, and there is very little excuse for that. The repetitive gameplay is hardly the conversion's fault, but it is pretty sloppy in most other departments, and the reduced difficulty (from the Mega Drive game at least) is a major mistake."
Flux magazine ranked the arcade version 74th on their Top 100 Video Games in 1995. They lauded the arcade version writing: "One of the best movie adaptations ever." == Legacy ==